@aidan_walsh @travisdh1 said in LattePanda + Android Limbo PC Emulator:
@scottalanmiller said in LattePanda + Android Limbo PC Emulator:
@aidan_walsh said in LattePanda + Android Limbo PC Emulator:
LattePanda is a neat looking board. Supports Ubuntu 16.04 as well as Windows.
Last gen Intel, though. I'd prefer current gen AMD.
huh, well, doesn't seem so interesting anymore.
there is AMD boards, but support has been removed, they are called gizmos and abit pricy and needs fan:
http://www.gizmosphere.org/products/gizmo-2/

It's been 3 days without google services on my android device. I was able to find decent alternatives for most functions. Although, I am definitely missing Google Maps. The open source alternatives suck in comparison. The software is good, but they depend on community populated maps which are MOSTLY incomplete. Forget trying to navigate to an address or find a local restaurant. Well sometimes you can find a local restaurant, but there is no contact or address info so you have to use a search engine as well.

@dashrender said in Mileage tracking app - any suggestions?:
Well - apparently our tax advisors have stated that we only need to monitor driving habits for two weeks, then use that data to extrapolate the expected business trips and do math... /sigh.. whatever.
Yeah, that's way easier.

@scottalanmiller said in Remix OS Discontinued:
@stacksofplates said in Remix OS Discontinued:
Wonder if I can install something else on my mini? Or if it's even worth trying...
I bet a normal Linux will work fine.
Idk do you can get in the boot loader or not. It would have to be "rooted"

There are some fun projects that you could do with this. Although for wearable I guess it is a lot harder to really do something cool yourself. Wearable Arduino already handles things like wearable lights. This would be more for having a secret screen inside your coat to watch movies on.

I'm thinking about one of these for the kids' bedroom back in Texas so that we can have a multimedia and multipurpose device that we can hook up to a TV monitor but get more general purpose use out of it than we would with just a Fire Stick or something like that.

@aidan_walsh said in Android OS: ConnectBot:
@gjacobse IIRC thats an optional extra for creating an account to sync your auth details between devices.
Yepp. And also, generating SSH keys, I'd imagine, but I may be off base on that. I have the paid version, and it's cheap, so I bought it since I use it so much.

@SamsungTX
Good info, thanks!
That would work for me. But we'll have to go to a store so she can hold it in her hand to see if it will be a good fit. (personally, I'd probably prefer the S8+)
We use T-Mobile, they've been great and the best for us so far, so no plans on switching... especially if they keep improving things like they seem to be.
For me, I prefer Windows Mobile... as my mobile use focus is on convenience (not sure how familiar you are with Win10 Mobile, but it's brilliant) and working seamlessly with my Win10 laptop.
My ideal solution or phone fantasy, would be the S8+ running Win10 Mobile! I doubt that will happen, so I'm waiting to see what happens with the "surface phone". But I am all about the S8 for my wife if it's a good fit after trying it out.

@travisdh1 said in Some Android Devices Susceptible to Wifi Hack:
@mlnews Huh, the news story I saw on that sounded like anything using a Broadcom chipset was vulnerable, which means a lot more devices than just Android and Apple.
Anything using a specific chipset. Not sure if anything outside of phones uses that one.

@Tim_G said in Samsung Galaxy S8 Facial Recognition Already Defeated with Picture:
@matteo-nunziati said in Samsung Galaxy S8 Facial Recognition Already Defeated with Picture:
@Tim_G said in Samsung Galaxy S8 Facial Recognition Already Defeated with Picture:
I don't understand why they didn't do it like the Lumia 950xl... iris scanner. Infrared to light up the eyes, another to take the pic.
they also have it! fingerprint, face, iris, pin, sequence... they only miss the list of things in your fridge
Then how can a regular picture fool it? Seems like a software issue and not hardware.
I mean: you can either auth yourself via face or any other solution. Samsung AFAIK doesn't implement so named pure biometric 2 factor-auth. You have just to avoid face and fingerprint (as it is too close to camera). just use iris or sequence/pin...
I own a xiaomi redmi 4 and to be honest rear-fingerprint scanners are a bit of a pain... I alternate fingerprint to sequences...

@aidan_walsh said in Build a Pine 64 Android TV for Under $50:
@scottalanmiller said in Build a Pine 64 Android TV for Under $50:
Well it is specifically Android TV, so if you want the Android TV OS, interface and compatibility. It's a video gaming platform as well as television system.
Its not through. Its a stock Android 5.1 image that requires you to get a media style interface from the Play Store, rather than a "proper" Android TV system.
Weird, maybe they pulled the version. They have Android 7 TV...
http://files.pine64.org/os/android/android-7.0-pine-a64-tv-v1.11.0-r67.img.gz

@scottalanmiller said in Google Renames Messenger to Android Messages:
Just a branding change, or does this signal a change in strategy for messaging on the Android platform by Google?
Nope, it's still a mess with all the different apps. They do like to rename one of the many, I can only assume it's meant as a marketing ploy because they rarely change the app functionality (unless they're removing features.)

@IRJ said in Android malware bites back in the real world.:
@travisdh1 said in Android malware bites back in the real world.:
@scottalanmiller said in Android malware bites back in the real world.:
@travisdh1 said in Android malware bites back in the real world.:
@scottalanmiller said in Android malware bites back in the real world.:
Android seems like a really bad choice for high security applications, like military. Custom Raspberry Pis with super locked down Linux general purpose OSes would make more sense.
Any consumer cellular devices period, I can easily triangulate a cell phone with very little hardware investment.
Do we know that they were consumer phones? I didn't look into it. You can put Android on non-phones, too.
True. I was assuming because the malware was able to stay in contact somehow. Might have been on a dedicated military network with just 1 connection to the outside.
Very interesting article...
You don't have to hack hundreds of phones. Have 3-5 important android devices may be enough to nearly paint a full picture.
And one might attack another.

@scottalanmiller said in iPhone 6 Plus dying... need new phone... suggestion?:
@Son-of-Jor-El said in iPhone 6 Plus dying... need new phone... suggestion?:
@stess said in iPhone 6 Plus dying... need new phone... suggestion?:
Well.... after reading your comments... I will give iPhone another chance (also because Oneplus 3T is 3 weeks away). I believe Apple has 14 days refund policy or sometime so it doesn't hurt my wallet that much.
If you have the $$$ go with the highest amount of memory you can afford.
I switched from 16GB to 128GB. SO much better!!
Totally agree!! I went all the way to 256GB. No more worrying about deleting songs, or pictures.

@Dashrender said in Android/iOS Antivirus Questions:
@coliver said in Android/iOS Antivirus Questions:
@MattSpeller said in Android/iOS Antivirus Questions:
@coliver said in Android/iOS Antivirus Questions:
@MattSpeller said in Android/iOS Antivirus Questions:
@coliver said in Android/iOS Antivirus Questions:
I'm not convinced it's necessary. Both iOS and Android have sandboxing features that prevent malicious code from running. Android, of course, lets the user run it anyway if they give that app permission. I think iOS has something similar but they have a pretty decent app store that prevents that type of thing, unlike Google.
I am an Android guy by the way.
I'm not convinced it's necessary either, but I believe I was infected and now I'm all paranoid.
One security research firm (I don't remember the name I'll have to look) went through the Google App store and downloaded as much malicious stuff as possible. They found that unless the application is given permission, which means a user has to allow it, then it really can't do anything on the system. If the user allows it then, obviously, the malicious code was able to execute and do it's thing.
That's exactly what creeps me out about Android - why does everything need permissions to stuff you wouldn't expect it to use. I fear the answer is "to slurp your data". Which is garbage. However the app won't run without it.
Example: "Samsung Briefing" which is a news aggregator - asks for permission to save to disk, phone, etc etc
The newest version of Android took a cue from iOS and now lets you be more judicial with app permissions. Haven't been able to play with it yet.
in what way? I don't see a way to prevent, for example, Skype from using my camera but allowing it access to the network and microphone.
Do you have Nougat? I could have sworn that was one of the selling points. Where you give permissions like that on an as needed basis. So you could very well prevent skype from accessing the camera but allow it to access the microphone. It may not work as expected but...

@Dashrender said in OpenVPN and Andriod Mobiles:
@iroal said in OpenVPN and Andriod Mobiles:
Right now I'm connected to Openvnp, in a Pfsense, and sending you this message all from my android Phone.
I use OpenVnp 0.6.60 for Android.
His problem isn't using OpenVPN from his android device. His issue is split tunneling - or the ability to surf the web through his office network's internet connection.
I mean I connect from a Samsung S5 using OpenVpn App, the OpenVnp server It's the Pfsense.

@IRJ said in Viewing PDF Files on an Android Mobile Browser:
webView.loadUrl("https://docs.google.com/viewer?url=" + "url of pdf file");
That prompts any URL to open using google docs viewer which works great in chrome mobile browser.
Is that ASP.NET code or classic ASP? Our pages are classic ASP.

Yeah but really it's likely not the device. It's USB-C quick Charing and people using Chinese cables and chargers. With USB-C the protection is built into the cable. These a much higher amp charging that normal.

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